Tenant Screening Checklist
Standardized workflow for screening rental applicants in compliance with the Fair Housing Act, FCRA, and state-specific tenant screening rules. Run once per applicant from first inquiry through final decision and notification.
Initial Contact & Pre-Screening
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Capture the prospect's contact details
Record name, phone, email, and the unit they're inquiring about. Use the same intake form for every prospect — inconsistent intake is a Fair Housing audit finding waiting to happen.
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Ask the standard pre-screening questions
Cover desired move-in date, lease term, occupants, pets, and reason for moving. Stick to the script — questions about familial status, national origin, disability, or other protected classes are Fair Housing Act violations even when asked casually.
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Send the written screening criteria
Email or hand the prospect the brokerage's published criteria — minimum credit score, income multiple, eviction lookback, criminal-history policy. Several states (WA, CA, OR, CO) require this in writing before accepting an application fee.
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Schedule the property showing
Application Intake
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Send the standardized rental application
Use the brokerage's single approved application form for every applicant. One form per adult occupant 18+, including non-leaseholder occupants where state law permits screening them.
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Collect the application fee
Confirm the fee is at or below your state's statutory cap (CA: $62.02 for 2024, WA: actual cost, OR: actual cost, NY: $20). Charging above cap is a license issue and the fee must be refunded.
Collects number -
Verify government ID and SSN
Match the application name to a government-issued photo ID. For applicants without an SSN, accept ITIN plus passport or visa — refusing alternative documents is a national-origin discrimination claim.
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Send the screening timeline notice
Tell the applicant the expected decision turnaround (typically 2–5 business days) and what reports will be pulled. Manage expectations early — most disputes start with applicants who think they're being ghosted.
Credit & Background Checks
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Obtain FCRA-compliant screening consent
Use a standalone written authorization signed by the applicant — bundled into a long application is an FCRA technical violation. Pulling a report without proper consent is statutory damages of $100–$1,000 per applicant.
Collects file -
Pull the credit report and FICO score
Use a CRA-compliant screening provider (TransUnion SmartMove, Experian RentBureau, RentPrep). Document the score, derogatory accounts, and outstanding collections. Apply your published threshold consistently — adjusting it per applicant is a Fair Housing claim.
Collects number -
Run criminal history per HUD 2016 guidance
Blanket criminal-record bans are disparate-impact violations under HUD's 2016 guidance. Apply an individualized assessment: nature of offense, time elapsed, evidence of rehabilitation. Several jurisdictions (Seattle, Oakland, NJ) bar criminal screening entirely for most offenses.
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Run a multi-state eviction search
Single-county searches miss filings from prior moves. Use a national eviction database with at least a 7-year lookback. Note: some states (CA, NV, OR, CT) seal or limit eviction records — your provider should respect those rules automatically.
Income & Employment Verification
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Contact the employer directly
Call the main HR or payroll line — never the number listed on the application alone. Fake-employer fraud rings provide convincing referee numbers; a quick web search to confirm the company exists at the stated address weeds most of them out.
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Collect two months of pay stubs and bank statements
For W-2 employees, two recent pay stubs plus two months of bank statements. For self-employed applicants, request the prior two years of tax returns and three months of business bank statements. Source-of-income discrimination laws in many states require accepting Section 8, SSI, child support, and other lawful income sources on equal terms.
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Calculate the income-to-rent ratio
Apply the published policy (commonly 3x gross monthly rent). Combine all leaseholders' verified income — penalizing co-applicants by counting only the lower earner is a Fair Housing issue. Document the calculation in the applicant file.
Collects list -
Request guarantor or co-signer documentation
The guarantor must independently meet the income threshold (typically 5x rent for guarantors) and complete the same screening as the applicant. Get the guarantor lease addendum signed before approval — verbal guarantees are unenforceable in most states.
Rental History Verification
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Contact two prior landlords
Skip the current landlord-only call — current landlords have a motive to give a glowing reference for a problem tenant they want gone. Reach two prior landlords beyond the current one; cross-reference addresses against the credit report header.
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Verify payment history and lease compliance
Ask: were rent payments on time, were there NSF returns, any lease violations or HOA complaints, was the security deposit returned in full. Document each answer verbatim — vague "they were fine" responses are a yellow flag.
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Confirm proper notice and move-out condition
Personal & Professional References
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Contact personal and professional references
Use the same scripted questions for every applicant. References can supplement but not override the objective screening criteria — Fair Housing requires consistent decision rules.
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Document reference feedback in the applicant file
Final Review & Decision
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Apply the written screening criteria to the file
Walk through each criterion with a yes/no result — credit threshold, income ratio, eviction lookback, rental history. The point is to be able to answer a Fair Housing complaint with the same decision rule applied identically to every applicant in the file.
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Record the approve, conditional, or deny decision
The decision and the reasoning go in the file together. Keep applicant files for at least the FCRA five-year record-retention window; many states require longer.
Collects list Collects paragraph Collects signature -
Send the FCRA adverse action notice
Required when denial is based wholly or partly on a consumer report. The notice must name the CRA used, state that the CRA didn't make the decision, and disclose the applicant's right to dispute and obtain a free report within 60 days under 15 USC 1681m.
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Notify the applicant and route to lease prep
For approvals, send the lease, security deposit instructions, and move-in checklist. For denials, deliver the decision in writing alongside the adverse action notice. Refund any unused portion of the application fee per state law.
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